Pennsylvania lawmakers renew push for gas-drilling tax

February 24, 2011|By Joelle Farrell, Inquirer Staff Writer
  • "We have to keep pushing," Rep. Tim Briggs (left) said at a hearing in King of Prussia. "The major driver is the $4 billion shortfall," said Rep. Greg Vitali (right). Both are Democrats.

With a looming Pennsylvania budget deficit estimated at more than $4 billion, some local Democratic state lawmakers sought Wednesday to inject renewed interest in taxing natural-gas drilling.

Although a similar effort failed last year despite better political odds, Democrats hope the tax will gain favor as the Republican-controlled legislature considers budget cuts in an effort to preserve Gov. Corbett's pledge not to raise taxes.

"The major driver is the $4 billion shortfall," said Rep. Greg Vitali (D., Delaware), the prime sponsor of a bill to enact a severance tax on gas drillers. "There's going to be more and more pressure to adopt this tax."

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"We have to keep pushing," said Rep. Tim Briggs (D., Montgomery), one of 57 cosponsors of the measure. "We passed it out of the House with bipartisan support last year. . . . It's going to be difficult [this year], but a majority of Pennsylvanians, 62 percent in a recent poll, support a tax on natural-gas drilling."

Vitali made his pitch Wednesday at a House Democratic Policy Committee hearing in King of Prussia attended by a handful of local House members. Several interest groups testified, but gas-drilling representatives declined to appear, Vitali said.

Last year, the Democratic House approved a tax equivalent to about 10 percent, but Senate Republicans pushed for a rate of 1.5 percent that would go up to 5 percent after five years. In October, Rendell said bill was dead because an agreement couldn't be reached.

Corbett, who received more than $875,720 in campaign contributions from the gas industry, has said he opposes a tax but might consider a fee for gas drillers.

Vitali's proposal was referred Feb. 9 to the Finance Committee. He said no hearing had been scheduled, adding: "I honestly don't expect there to be. I think this bill is a vehicle to bring attention to this issue."

The measure would tax drillers' revenue at 6 percent. A third of the amount would go to the state's general fund, a third to county and municipal governments, and a third to environmental groups.

Pennsylvania ranks 12th of 33 states that produce natural gas, contributing about 1.3 percent of the nation's supply in 2009, according to Michael Wood, research director of the Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center, a nonprofit, nonpartisan Harrisburg group. Pennsylvania is the only one of the top 15 natural-gas-producing states that does not tax gas extraction.

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